Introduction In the Netherlands, stream restoration generally refers to the construction of low-sinuosity channels. After construction, these channels typically show little morphological changes in time, mainly due to oversized cross-sections. Occasionally, pronounced morphological changes do occur, including meander cutoffs. In literature, two main types of meander cutoffs have been identified. Neck cutoffs can develop by the progressive migration of an elongated bend into itself. Chute cutoffs are shortcuts developing over a point bar within one bend (Lewis and Lewin, 1983). Neck cutoffs are more likely to occur in high-sinuosity meander bends, whereas chute cutoffs appear in meander bends featuring a moderate to low sinuosity. Here we re...
The occurrence of cutoff events, although sporadic, is a key component in the complex dynamics of me...
In analytical and numerical models of river meandering, initiation of meandering typically occurs un...
Two rivers near Ames, Iowa, which were artificially straightened in 1900, are developing a meanderin...
Introduction In the Netherlands, stream restoration generally refers to the construction of low-sinu...
<p>Stream restoration efforts often aim at creating new unconstrained meandering channels without we...
Stream restoration efforts often aim at creating new unconstrained meandering channels without weirs...
Chute cutoffs are autogenic mechanisms typical of many meandering rivers with wide cross sections, l...
Chute cutoffs reduce sinuosity of meandering rivers and potentially cause a transition from a single...
Neck cutoffs and their resultant oxbow lakes are important and prominent features of riverine landsc...
Neck cutoffs in meandering rivers have long been thought to occur when the neck width (b) approximat...
Incidents of chute cutoff are pervasive along many meandering rivers worldwide, but the process is s...
The majority of current meandering river models treat the cutoff process as a geometric scheme: when...
Chute cutoffs are common features of meandering channels. The development of a chute cutoff locally ...
Chute cutoffs reduce sinuosity of meandering rivers and potentially cause a transition from a single...
The reach of the Clark Fork River just west of Missoula is quite dynamic, and due to erosion and dep...
The occurrence of cutoff events, although sporadic, is a key component in the complex dynamics of me...
In analytical and numerical models of river meandering, initiation of meandering typically occurs un...
Two rivers near Ames, Iowa, which were artificially straightened in 1900, are developing a meanderin...
Introduction In the Netherlands, stream restoration generally refers to the construction of low-sinu...
<p>Stream restoration efforts often aim at creating new unconstrained meandering channels without we...
Stream restoration efforts often aim at creating new unconstrained meandering channels without weirs...
Chute cutoffs are autogenic mechanisms typical of many meandering rivers with wide cross sections, l...
Chute cutoffs reduce sinuosity of meandering rivers and potentially cause a transition from a single...
Neck cutoffs and their resultant oxbow lakes are important and prominent features of riverine landsc...
Neck cutoffs in meandering rivers have long been thought to occur when the neck width (b) approximat...
Incidents of chute cutoff are pervasive along many meandering rivers worldwide, but the process is s...
The majority of current meandering river models treat the cutoff process as a geometric scheme: when...
Chute cutoffs are common features of meandering channels. The development of a chute cutoff locally ...
Chute cutoffs reduce sinuosity of meandering rivers and potentially cause a transition from a single...
The reach of the Clark Fork River just west of Missoula is quite dynamic, and due to erosion and dep...
The occurrence of cutoff events, although sporadic, is a key component in the complex dynamics of me...
In analytical and numerical models of river meandering, initiation of meandering typically occurs un...
Two rivers near Ames, Iowa, which were artificially straightened in 1900, are developing a meanderin...